5O Years After Hiroshima
Rawls, John
The fiftieth year since the bombing of Hiroshima is a time to reflect about what one should think of it. Is it really a great wrong, as many now think, and many also thought then, or is it...
...Emphatically to be repudiated are two nihilist doctrines...
...War plans and strategies, and the conduct of battles, must lie within their limits (The only exception, I repeat, is in times of extreme crisis...
...2 I assume that democratic peoples do not go to war against each other...
...I believe that both the fire-bombing of Japanese cities beginning in the spring of 1945 and the later atomic bombing of Hiroshima on August 6 were very great wrongs, and rightly seen as such...
...A duty of statesmanship is not to allow such feelings, natural and inevitable as they may be, to alter the course a democratic people should best follow in striving for peace...
...4 Here I follow Michael Walzer's Just and Unjust Wars (Basic Books, 1977...
...From the beginning the campaign against Russia, for example, was a war of destruction against Slavic peoples, with the original inhabitants remaining, if at all, only as serfs...
...12, Summer and Fall 1983...
...5 For the idea of status, I am indebted to discussions of Frances Kamm and Thomas Nagel...
...There is never a time when we are free from all moral and political principles and restraints...
...As the war progressed, the heavy fire-bombing of civilians in the capitals of Berlin and Tokyo and elsewhere was increasingly accepted on the allied side...
...See Michael Doyle's two part article, "Kant, Liberal Legacies, and Foreign Affairs," Philosophy and Public Affairs, Vol...
...Whatever they may be told by their leaders, whatever reprisals they may reasonably fear, they are not to be held as slaves or serfs after surrender,' or denied in due course their full liberties...
...SUMMER • 1995 • 327...
...It is sometimes said that questioning the bombing of Hiroshima is an insult to the American troops who fought the war...
...The failure of these reasons to reflect the limits on the conduct of war is evident, so I focus on a different matter: the failure of statesmanship on the part of allied leaders and why it might have occurred...
...They are in the most effective position to represent their people's aims and obligations, and sometimes they become statesmen...
...1. The aim of a just war waged by a decent democratic society is a just and lasting peace between peoples, especially with its present enemy...
...I° See McCullough's Truman, p. 458, the exchange between Truman and Senator Russell of Georgia in August 1945...
...Rather, we have a matter of judgment as to whether certain objective circumstances are present which constitute the extreme crisis exemption...
...Turning now to Hiroshima and the fire-bombing of Tokyo, we find that neither falls under the exemption of extreme crisis...
...9:IV and 10, pp.390-464...
...In this way their significance is best brought home to them...
...Washington and Lincoln were statesmen...
...such as Germany and Japan, which sought the domination and exploitation of subjected peoples, and in Germany's case, their enslavement if not extermination...
...If the principles of war are put forward at that time, they easily become so many more considerations to be balanced in the scales...
...They guide their people through turbulent and dangerous periods for which they are esteemed always, as one of their great statesmen...
...7 I might add here that a balancing of interests is not involved...
...This reason is highly disputed but urged by some critics and scholars as important...
...But who is a statesman...
...Here the proclamations of a nation should make clear (the statesman must see to this) that the enemy people are to be granted an autonomous regime of their own and a decent and full life once peace is securely reestablished...
...It was simply too late...
...Above all, they are to hold fast to the aim of gaining a just peace, and avoid the things that make achieving such a peace more difficult...
...We expect the Germans and the Japanese to do that—"Vergangenheitsverarbeitung"—as the Germans say...
...True, the Japanese were deluded by the hope that the Russians might prove to be their allies," but negotiations are precisely to disabuse the other side of delusions of that kind...
...I also believe this could have been done at little cost in further casualties...
...3 Responsibility for war rarely falls on only one side and this must be granted...
...For him it was an opportunity missed, and a loss to the country and its armed forces as well...
...Statesmen are presidents or prime ministers who become statesmen through their exemplary performance and leadership in their office in difficult and trying times and manifest strength, wisdom, and courage...
...There had been discussions in Japan for some time about finding a way to end the war, and on June 26 the government had been instructed by the Emperor to do so.' 2 It must surely have realized that with the navy destroyed and the outer islands taken, the war was lost...
...The grounds on which they may be attacked directly are not that they are responsible for the war but that a democratic people cannot defend itself in any other way, and defend itself it must do...
...Here the cutoff point might be placed differently, say the summer of 1942, and certainly by Stalingrad.' I shan't dwell on this, as the crucial matter is that under no conditions could Germany be allowed to win the war, and this for two basic reasons: first, the nature and history of constitutional democracy and its place in European culture...
...They are assigned a certain status, the status of the members of some human society who possess rights as human persons.' In the case of human rights in war the aspect of status as applied to civilians is given a strict interpretation...
...Another reason was that it would save lives where the lives counted are the lives of American soldiers...
...VIII: (Houghton Mifflin, 1988), reflecting later on Dresden, p. 259...
...This is hard to understand...
...The ideal of the statesman is suggested by the saying: the politician looks to the next election, 324 • DISSENT 50 Years After Hiroshima the statesman to the next generation...
...6 See Churchill's remarks explaining the meaning of "unconditional surrender" in The Hinge of Fate (Houghton Mifflin, 1950), pp...
...One aspect of this is that since (let's suppose) there are no absolute rights—rights that must be respected in all circumstances— there are occasions when civilians can be attacked directly by aerial bombing...
...Under the continuing pressure of war, such moral doubts as there were failed to gain an express and articulated view...
...685-688...
...13 See Weinberg, ibid., p. 886...
...10 Of the Nazis and Tojo militarists, yes, but they are not the German and the Japanese people...
...Reflections on just war cannot be heard in the daily round of the pressure of events near the end of the hostilities...
...This follows from the fact that democratic peoples do not wage war against each other...
...Yet some dirty hands are dirtier than others, and sometimes even with dirty hands a democratic people would still have the right and even the duty to defend itself from the other side...
...206-232...
...These nihilisms are pretenses to be free of those principles and restraints that always apply to us fully...
...and second, the peculiar evil of Nazism and the enormous and uncalculable moral and political evil it represented for civilized society...
...the statesman sees deeper and further than most others and grasps what needs to be done...
...The peculiar evil of Nazism needs to be understood, since in some circumstances a democratic people might better accept defeat if the terms of peace offered by the adversary were reasonable and moderate, did not subject them to humiliation and looked forward to a workable and decent political relationship...
...633-644...
...2. A decent democratic society is fighting against a state that is not democratic...
...He did not see Germany's real interests far enough into the future and his judgment and motives were often distorted by his class interests and his wanting himself alone to be chancellor of Germany...
...One is expressed by Sherman's remark, "War is hell," so anything goes to get it over with as soon as one can...
...These peoples' have different ends of war than nondemocratic, especially totalitarian, states, I am grateful to Burton Dreben, Thomas Nagel, and T. M. Scanlon for discussing this essay with me...
...It can't be that we think we waged the war without moral error...
...It is the task of the statesman, however, to discern these conditions and interests in practice...
...In a nation's conduct of war many such marginal cases may exist, but they are irrelevant...
...These last duties fall largely on the leaders and officials of the governments of democratic peoples, since they are in the best position to speak for the whole people and to act as the principle applies...
...Although after the outbreak of war Roosevelt had urged both sides not to commit the inhuman barbarism of bombing civilians, by 1945 allied leaders came to assume that Roosevelt would have used the bomb SUMMER • 1995 • 325 60 Years After Hiroshima on Hiroshima.9 The bombing grew out of what had happened before...
...Were there times during the war when Britain could properly have bombed Hamburg and Berlin...
...yet how foolish it sounds now to call the Germans or the Japanese barbarians and beasts...
...The statesman knows, if others do not, that all descriptions of the enemy people (not their rulers) inconsistent with this are impulsive and false...
...6 Finally, we note the place of practical meansend reasoning in judging the appropriateness of an action or policy for achieving the aim of war or for not causing more harm than good...
...See his summary of the evidence in the first part, pp...
...The practical means-end reasons to justify using the atomic bomb on Hiroshima were the following: The bomb was dropped to hasten the end of the war...
...The statesman understands that relations with the present enemy have special importance: for as I have said, war must be openly and publicly conducted in ways that make a lasting and amicable peace possible with a defeated enemy, and prepares its people for how they may be expected to be treated...
...The principles of the conduct of war were always applicable to it...
...Why shouldn't we...
...Their present fears of being subjected to acts of revenge and retaliation must be put to rest...
...One is because they simply have these rights by the law of peoples...
...Certainly war is a kind of hell, but why should that mean that all moral distinctions cease to hold?And granted also that sometimes all or nearly all may be to some degree guilty, that does not mean that all are equally so...
...This was done by its leaders and officials assisted by other elites who control and staff the state apparatus...
...12, §5, pp...
...We should be able to look back and consider our faults after fifty years...
...They are responsible, they willed the war, and for doing that, they are criminals...
...As with any other complex concept, that of such an exemption is to some degree vague...
...This means, as I understand it here, that they can never be attacked directly except in times of extreme crisis, the nature of which I discuss below...
...There is considerable evidence of this important idea...
...A conscientious attempt to do so was morally necessary...
...Bismarck was not...
...Churchill later granted that he carried the bombing too far, led by passion and the intensity of the conflict...
...Yes, when Britain was alone and desperately facing Germany's superior might...
...Truman was in many ways a good, at times a very good president...
...This practical reasoning justifies too much, too easily, and provides a way for a dominant power to quiet any moral worries that may arise...
...These are both superficial and deny all reasonable distinctions...
...The reason for these distinctions rests on the principle of responsibility: since the state fought against is not democratic, the civilian members of the society cannot be those who organized and brought on the war...
...This is clear in World War II...
...Whether or not the concept applies rests on judgment...
...The moral emptiness of these nihilisms is manifest in the fact that just and decent civilized societies—their institutions and laws, their civil life and background culture and mores—all depend absolutely on making significant moral and political distinctions in all situations...
...In connection with the fourth and fifth principles of the conduct of war, I have said that they are binding especially on the leaders of nations...
...The statesman must get it right, or nearly so, and hold fast to it...
...II See Martin Gilbert, Winston Churchill: Never Despair, Vol...
...Similarly, the justification of constitutional democracy and the basis of the rights and duties it must respect should be part of the public political culture and discussed in the many associations of civic society as part of one's education...
...A statesman is not free to consider that such negotiations may lessen the desired shock value of subsequent attacks...
...A president or prime minister must have carefully considered these questions, preferably long before, or at least when they had the time and leisure to think things out...
...Yet during the discussions among allied leaders in June and July 1945, the weight of the practical means-end reasoning carried the day...
...Here the calculations of least time and most lives saved were mutually supporting...
...It is not clearly heard in day-to-day ordinary politics, but must be presupposed as the background, not the daily subject of politics, except in special circumstances...
...This mode of thought—whether carried on by (classical) utilitarian reasoning, or by cost-benefit analysis, or by weighing national interests, or in other ways— must always be framed within and strictly limited by the preceding principles...
...But the way he ended the war showed he failed as a statesman...
...The last reason I mention is that the bomb was dropped to impress the Russians with American power and make them more agreeable with our demands...
...This duty of statesmanship must always be held in view...
...Yet characteristic of Hitler was that he accepted no possibility at all of a political relationship with his enemies...
...These remarks make it clear that, in my judgment, both Hiroshima and the fire-bombing of Japanese cities were great evils that the duties of statesmanship require political leaders to avoid in the absence of the crisis exemption...
...2 and since we are conSUMMER • 1995 • 323 50 Years After Hiroshima cerned with the rules of war as they apply to such peoples, we assume the society fought against is nondemocratic and that its expansionist aims threatened the security and free institutions of democratic regimes and caused the war.' 3. In the conduct of war, a democratic society must carefully distinguish three groups: the state's leaders and officials, its soldiers, and its civilian population...
...Another failure of statesmanship was not to try to enter negotiations with the Japanese before 326 • DISSENT 50 Years After Hiroshima any drastic steps such as the fire-bombing of cities or the bombing of Hiroshima were taken...
...Notes I I sometimes use the term "peoples" to mean much the same as nations, especially when I want to contrast peoples with states and a state's apparatus...
...Although I cannot properly justify them here, I begin by setting out six principles and assumptions in support of these judgments...
...Although all the preceding principles also specify duties of statesmanship, this is especially true of 4 and 5. The way a war is fought and the actions ending it endure in the historical memory of peoples and may set the stage for future war...
...By doing so, they show in an open and public way the nature of their aims and the kind of people they are...
...Responsibility for the opinions expressed is, of course, my own...
...But civilians, often kept in ignorance and swayed by state propaganda, are not.' And this is so even if some civilians knew better and were enthusiastic for the war...
...In the same way, there was not sufficient prior grasp of the fundamental importance of the principles of just war for the expression of them to have blocked the appeal of practical means-end reasoning in terms of a calculus of lives, or of the least time to end the war, or of some other balancing of costs and benefits...
...About this there is no choice...
...None of this alters Germany's and Japan's responsibility for the war nor their behavior in conducting it...
...The statesman is an ideal, like the ideal of the truthful or virtuous individual...
...When Goebbels and others protested that the war could not be won that way, Hitler refused to listen.' Yet it is clear that while the extreme crisis exemption held for Britain in the early stages of the war, it never held at any time for the United States in its war with Japan...
...The other reason is to teach enemy soldiers and civilians the content of those rights by the example of how they hold in their own case...
...Without the crisis exemption, those bombings are great evils...
...present enemies must be seen as associates in a shared and just future peace...
...Is it really a great wrong, as many now think, and many also thought then, or is it perhaps justified after all...
...There is no office of statesman, as there is of president, or chancellor, or prime minister...
...and they may well achieve freedoms they did not enjoy before, as the Germans and the Japanese eventually did...
...5. Continuing with the thought of teaching the content of human rights, the next principle is that just peoples by their actions and proclamations are to foreshadow during war the kind of peace they aim for and the kind of relations they seek between nations...
...The norms of the conduct of war set up certain lines that bound just action...
...they are invoked falsely to try to excuse our misconduct or to plead that we cannot be condemned...
...and certainly they are familiar, as they are closely related to much traditional thought on this subject...
...They were always to be cowed by terror and brutality, and ruled by force...
...Truman once described the Japanese as beasts and to be treated as such...
...The other says that we are all guilty so we stand on a level and no one can blame anyone else...
...It is clear that Truman and most other allied leaders thought it would do that...
...too many are anxious and impatient, and simply worn out...
...An invasion was unnecessary at that date, as the war was effectively over...
...As for soldiers, they, just as civilians, and leaving aside the upper ranks of an officer class, are not responsible for the war, but are conscripted or in other ways forced into it, their patriotism often cruelly and cynically exploited...
...and Barton Bernstein, "The Atomic Bombings Reconsidered," Foreign Affairs, 74:1, Jan-Feb 1995...
...It is the task of the student of philosophy to look to the permanent conditions and the real interests of a just and good democratic society...
...Moreover, dropping the bomb would give the Emperor and the Japanese leaders a way to save face, an important matter given Japanese samurai culture...
...In order to support this opinion, I set out what I think to be the principles governing the conduct of war—jus in bello—of democratic peoples...
...Statesmen need not be selfless and may have their own interests when they hold office, yet they must be selfless in their judgments and assessments of society's interests and not be swayed, especially in war and crisis, by passions of revenge and retaliation against the enemy...
...The lives of Japanese, military or civilian, presumably counted for less...
...12 See Gerhard Weinberg, A World at Arms (Cambridge: The University Press, 1994), pp...
...Yet it is clear that an articulate expression of the principles of just war introduced at that time would not have altered the outcome...
...8 On Goebbels's and others' protests, see Alan Bullock, Hitler: A Study in Tyranny (London: Oldham's Press, 1952), Ch...
...moreover, this period would extend until Russia had clearly beat off the first German assault in the summer and fall of 1941, and would be able to fight Germany until the end...
...Indeed, in the case of Hiroshima many involved in higher reaches of the government recognized the questionable character of the bombing and that limits were being crossed...
...Indeed, at the end a few top Japanese leaders wanted to make a last sacrificial stand but were overruled by others supported by the Emperor, who ordered surrender on August 12, having received word from Washington that the Emperor could stay provided it was understood that he had to comply with the orders of the American military commander...
...As a democratic people, we owed that to the Japanese people—whether to their government is another matter...
...I hope they seem not unreasonable...
...9 For an account of events, see David M. McCullough, Truman (Simon and Schuster, 1992), Ch...
...However, whether that is true or not makes no difference...
...4. A decent democratic society must respect the human rights of the members of the other side, both civilians and soldiers, for two reasons...
...886-889...
Vol. 42 • July 1995 • No. 3